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A History of the World: Chapter 24: Imperialism and World War I

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  1. imperialism
    a policy of extending your rule over foreign countries
    Imperialism is the direct or indirect control of one nation by another nation.
  2. protectorate
    a state or territory partly controlled by a stronger state
    Sometimes they set up a protectorate. There the local people had their own government, but the imperial government controlled the military and could tell the local rulers what to do.
  3. sphere
    the area over which a nation has power or control
    In other cases they set up a sphere of influence—a region where only one imperial power has the right to invest or to trade.
  4. strategic
    highly important to or an integral part of a plan of action
    They built trading posts in strategic places along India's coast.
  5. construct
    make by combining materials and parts
    The Europeans and Egyptians constructed the Suez Canal, which opened in 1869.
  6. dominion
    control or power through legal authority
    And it was at this moment, as I stood there with the rifle in my hands, that I first grasped the hollowness, the futility of the white man's dominion in the East.
  7. tyrant
    any person who exercises power in a cruel way
    I perceived in this moment that when the white man turns tyrant it is his own freedom that he destroys.
  8. sahib
    a title of respect for men in colonial India
    He becomes a sort of hollow, posing dummy, the...figure of a sahib. For it is the condition of his rule that he shall spend his life in trying to impress the "natives," and so in every crisis he has got to do what the "natives" expect of him.
  9. extraterritorial
    beyond the boundaries or control of a particular area
    Furthermore, Europeans in China won the right to bypass Chinese laws and live under their own laws. This legal practice is called extraterritoriality.
  10. decline
    grow smaller
    The Qing dynasty's power continued to decline, however.
  11. reluctantly
    with a certain degree of unwillingness
    Instead, it proposed an Open Door policy that would open China to trade with all countries. Other nations reluctantly agreed to this policy in 1899.
  12. prohibit
    command against
    The Tokugawa shoguns feared that Christianity and other European ideas would destroy traditional Japanese culture. That concern led them to prohibit contact with foreigners.
  13. militarism
    maintaining a strong force of armed services
    If one nation increased the size of its military, its rivals increased their own forces. As a result, a spirit of militarism spread throughout Europe. This term refers to a high regard for military might.
  14. conscription
    compulsory military service
    Conscription means that a government requires citizens to serve in the military for a certain period of time. Conscription is also called a "draft."
  15. entente
    a friendly understanding between political powers
    An entente is an understanding among nations.
  16. dominate
    be larger in number, quantity, power, status or importance
    A balance of power prevents any one country from dominating the others.
  17. mobilization
    the act of assembling and putting into readiness for war
    Russia, Serbia's ally, began mobilization, or the gathering and movement of troops.
  18. neutrality
    nonparticipation in a dispute or war
    On August 4, German forces invaded Belgium, breaking a treaty that had guaranteed Belgium's neutrality.
  19. propaganda
    information that is spread to promote some cause
    They used propaganda—biased, government-controlled information—to control citizens' thinking about the war.
  20. blockade
    a war measure isolating an area of importance to the enemy
    Controlling the seas, the British navy placed a blockade on Germany. That is, British naval ships prevented goods from leaving or entering German ports.
  21. collapse
    an abrupt failure of function or complete exhaustion
    Meanwhile, Austria-Hungary was close to collapse, and the Ottoman Turks surrendered.
  22. armistice
    a state of peace agreed to between opponents
    On November 11, 1918, Germany signed an armistice, or cease-fire, ending the war.
  23. genocide
    systematic killing of a racial or cultural group
    Their anger led them to kill hundreds of thousands of Armenians in a terrible genocide. Genocide is the deliberate killing of an ethnic group.
  24. reparation
    compensation exacted from a defeated nation by the victors
    Under the treaty's terms, Germany owed the Allies billions of dollars in reparations, or payments for war damages.
  25. mandate
    territory surrendered by Turkey or Germany after World War I
    The Allies divided up the Ottoman Arab lands. France took Syria and Lebanon. Britain gained Iraq, Palestine, and Jordan. These new territories were called mandates. The League of Nations held each mandate but allowed a member nation to run it.
  26. soviet
    an elected governmental council in a communist country
    Many Russian workers felt that the government favored the middle class, or those with wealth. They set up committees, called soviets, to represent their concerns.
  27. radical
    markedly new or introducing extreme change
    As socialists, they wanted workers to create a society based on equality for all. The most radical group was the Bolsheviks. The Bolsheviks believed that they could use force to bring about this ideal society.
Created on Thu Jun 17 10:35:08 EDT 2021 (updated Tue Jun 22 08:34:09 EDT 2021)

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